DarkKnight88
Avenger
- Joined
- Aug 23, 2002
- Messages
- 13,068
- Reaction score
- 12,201
- Points
- 103
The OC.
That's no more or less a valid take than this is.I always felt like Oswald coming from money and the Cobblepot family being a part of Gotham’s history is a nice touch with the character. You can still present him as a street-level guy who’s had to work his way up the ranks, but if for whatever reason he’s been cut off from his family/fortune it can inform some of his inferiority complex and drive to take back what he feels is rightfully his. Assuming the Cobblepot name signals “old money”, there are plenty of realistic reasons he could have the name while still having humble origins— it wouldn’t really require explanation.
That's no more or less a valid take than this is.
The hand-wringing over this is beyond ridiculous imo. It's a villain's last name. People got over it with the Riddler, they'll get over it here.
Realistic is a better word than "grounded" since Cobblepott is likely a made-up or extremely rare English surname.I always felt like Oswald coming from money and the Cobblepot family being a part of Gotham’s history is a nice touch with the character. You can still present him as a street-level guy who’s had to work his way up the ranks, but if for whatever reason he’s been cut off from his family/fortune it can inform some of his inferiority complex and drive to take back what he feels is rightfully his. Assuming the Cobblepot name signals “old money”, there are plenty of realistic reasons he could have the name while still having humble origins— it wouldn’t really require explanation. I mean, if they were going for full-on realism, Farrell’s version seems more likely to be named Osvaldo Coballepotti.
Granted, this might be a totally different take so I’m curious what they’ll do with it in the show. But I don’t quite buy that Cobb is a more “grounded” name than Cobblepot…I do suspect the bigger reason for the change could be a tie to the Court with the whole William Cobb thing.
I will not be doing that.Realistic is a better word than "grounded" since Cobblepott is likely a made-up or extremely rare English surname.
Besides, given that this particular take on Penguin appears to be Italian-American (as you've playfully alluded to), it's cleaner for him to have a more simple name like Cobb. You could just say that it was originally something like Cobbini and his Italian forebears had it anglicized when they immigrated to the US. I initially suggested that he could be part Italian and part English, but when you give him two heritages like that, you run into other complications. For instance, you may recall that in the movie Goodfellas, James Conway and Henry Hill were both denied the opportunity to become "made men" in the Mafia because they were half Irish and not entirely Italian. So, yeah, having a common surname like Cobb just makes the "anglicized" explanation cleaner, IMO.
Yeah, that's just an example assuming he's even meant to be Italian-American in this universe.I will not be doing that.![]()
Yeah, I get you. Just couldn't resist the joke.Yeah, that's just an example assuming he's even meant to be Italian-American in this universe.
Yeah, that's just an example assuming he's even meant to be Italian-American in this universe.
Oz Cobb huh? I'll do you one better. Instead of Oz you can make his first name Salad. That way you can even change his club from Iceberg Lounge to Iceberg Lettuce. Lettuce is literally growing from the ground. You can't get more grounded than that.![]()
Hopefully for The Batman Part II we can get the Oz Cobb Salad on the menu at Alamo Drafthouse. With iceberg lettuce of course.![]()
I swear, I missed your post!
Believe it or not, Carmine and Falcone are indeed real names.My take is thay the name-change isn't a big deal, but the reason is a bit silly.
I mean, I've yet to meet someone called Carmine Falcone or Pennyworth, so a Cobblepot...
Also, without opening the can of worms of debates about realism or what constitutes a “grounded approach”, I don't think something as simple as that name would have been as jarring with what was introduced in the first film, an universe with gangsters wearing striped suits at the same time as modern/futuristic technology, secret clubs and, well, a Batman.
Anyway, not something that will matters in the grand scheme of things.
The character was pretty much cemented in my mind as “Oz” anyway.
Oh yeah, everything from the accent to the mannerisms to the prosthetics screamsTo be fair, this version of the character was probably a "pasta scene" away from being canceled...
I'm kidding, of course.
But to me, he was definitely conceived as the typical "New York Italian" mafioso.
Hopefully for The Batman Part II we can get the Oz Cobb Salad on the menu at Alamo Drafthouse. With iceberg lettuce of course.![]()